6 reviews
Well this show is no Earth Mightiest Heroes or Avengers Assemble but it is still a good enough show for kids.
Most of the episode just contain Spider-Man explaining an adventure he has and what he has learned from it and that is pretty much it.
Well, i am not a massive fan of Canadian animation especially their previous marvel shows but this not bad.
Most of the episode just contain Spider-Man explaining an adventure he has and what he has learned from it and that is pretty much it.
Well, i am not a massive fan of Canadian animation especially their previous marvel shows but this not bad.
It's ok. I like that they tried to teach kids the benefits of friendship, co-operation and heroism while entertaining them. I am confused as to why this spiderman is the same spiderman as the one from the 2017 tv series.
I can't believe this is rated so low. I have to assume that is only because it's a show trying to entertain and teach young children. It can't possibly be based on the actual quality of the content, which is great. For some reason people hate when Marvel characters are changed but it's a part of life. I never heard a single person complain about Nick Fury changing races, which made absolutely no sense, but make something educational and people have to hate. I hope Marvel makes more of these.
I have seen a lot of these shorts on YouTube, and I can easily say this is a good show for preschoolers who are into Marvel's cast of heroes and villains.
Each episode follows a formula: A beginning usually has Spider-Man talking to the viewers about something he has trouble with, or he would encounter a couple of kids arguing about something. He tells them the lesson of the episode, and how he learned it during an adventure with another superhero from the Mavel universe, which cuts to a flashback where Spidey and the other characters are in chibi style (similar to Super Hero Squad Show), where Spidey is doing something with a random superhero (be it mainstream heroes lole Iron Man, Captain America, The Hulk, and Black Panther, to even other Spider-heroes like Miles Morales and Ghost-Spider), until a villain decides to cause trouble. Then it ends with it back with Spidey (with the same animation style as before the flashback), fixing the problem or helping the kids solve their problem using what they learned,
This is a neat cartoon for preschoolers. Not only does each episode teach a good moral, it also has some action, while devoid of the fisticuffs and other violence seen in the Marvel cartoons aimed at older kids, does involve the heroes using their powers to solve problems.
Each episode follows a formula: A beginning usually has Spider-Man talking to the viewers about something he has trouble with, or he would encounter a couple of kids arguing about something. He tells them the lesson of the episode, and how he learned it during an adventure with another superhero from the Mavel universe, which cuts to a flashback where Spidey and the other characters are in chibi style (similar to Super Hero Squad Show), where Spidey is doing something with a random superhero (be it mainstream heroes lole Iron Man, Captain America, The Hulk, and Black Panther, to even other Spider-heroes like Miles Morales and Ghost-Spider), until a villain decides to cause trouble. Then it ends with it back with Spidey (with the same animation style as before the flashback), fixing the problem or helping the kids solve their problem using what they learned,
This is a neat cartoon for preschoolers. Not only does each episode teach a good moral, it also has some action, while devoid of the fisticuffs and other violence seen in the Marvel cartoons aimed at older kids, does involve the heroes using their powers to solve problems.
- jeremycrimsonfox
- Jul 18, 2020
- Permalink
- robert-bjork-506-890007
- Oct 3, 2018
- Permalink
I can't describe how much I actually loved this show! The light-heartedness of it, the vibes, how fun and simple it was, it took me back to some nostalgia!
- AnnaPagrati
- Mar 17, 2022
- Permalink